About 27 per cent have tried smoking, and 40 per cent don’t get the recommended one hour a day of physical activity. The province has spent close to $600,000 this past year on funding after-school programs and team sports, to try and get more young people active.

Sixty per cent of kids said they don’t regularly eat breakfast, or get enough fruits and vegetables in their diet.

Minister of Healthy and Inclusive Communities Dorothy Shepard said the province is targeting the survey in the school system.

“This data is able to be broken down regionally, so every district can look at it and decide where they need to put emphasis, what they need to put as their priorities and funneling those resources to target the results they want to get,” Shepard said.

While fewer students said they are being exposed to smoke at home, the age when kids first try a cigarette has dropped, to 12 years old.

“Students are telling students about the consequences of smoking and encouraging them not to. So we have students taking ownership of that responsibility,” she said.